She once gave a speech at a local mosque
to raise funds for Bosnian orphans, and when the audience
was just sitting there watching her, she asked: "How
many people in this room own more than one pair of boots?"
When half the room raised their hands, she said: "So,
donate them to these Bosnians who are about to face a brutal
winter!" She was so effective in her plea that
even the imam took off his boots and donated them!
There is much more to say about how passionate
this sister was for Islam. However, the above gives you
an idea of what she was like, and should hopefully serve
as an inspiration for brothers before sisters to become
active in serving Islam through whatever means are available.
Remember that she was doing all of this while being a mother
and a PhD student, and most of us do much less despite having
much more free time.
So, having this image of Aafia in my mind,
I was taken aback at what I saw when she was brought into
court for what should have been her bail hearing. The door
on the front left side of the courtroom was slowly opened
to reveal a frail, limp, exhausted woman who could barely
hold her own head up straight in a pale blue wheelchair.
She was dressed in a Guantanamo-style orange prison uniform,
and her frail head was wrapped in a white hijab that was
pulled down to cover her bone-thin arms (the prison uniform
is shortsleeved). Her lawyers quickly sat around her, and
the hearing began.
The head prosecutor, assistant US attorney
Christopher LaVigne, walked in with a group of three or
four FBI agents, one of whom was a female who looked Pakistani.
The defense began by announcing that the bail hearing was
to be postponed because of Aafia's medical condition. Essentially,
Aafia's lawyers reasoned that there was no point of her
being out on bail if she was near death. So, they demanded
that she be allowed a doctor's visit before anything else.
LaVigne got up and objected, saying that Aafia was a risk
to the security of the United States. The judge didn't seem
to buy that, and the prosecutor continued arguing that "this
is a woman who attempted to blast her way out of captivity."
As soon as this was said, I looked over and noticed Aafia
shaking her head in desperation and sadness, as if she felt
that the whole world was against her. By the way, Aafia
was so small and weak that I could barely see her from behind
the wheelchair. All I could see was her head slumped over
to the left and wrapped in the hijab, and her right arm
sticking out.
I got a better understanding of why she
was so sad and desperate when her lawyer began listing details
of her condition:
* She now has brain damage from her time
in US custody
* One of her kidneys was removed while in US custody
* She is unable to digest her food since part of her intestines
was removed during surgery while in US custody
* She has layers and layers of sewed up skin from the surgery
for the gunshot wound
* She has a large surgical scar from her chest area all
the way down to her torso
With all of this, she had not been visited
by a single doctor the entire time of her incarceration
in the US despite being in constant incredible abdominal
pain following her sloppy surgery in Afghanistan - pain
for which she was being given nothing more than Ibuprofen!
Ibuprofen is purchased over the counter to treat headaches!
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